- James Ford (pirate)
James Ford was an American civic leader and
business owner in southernIllinois at the turn of the 19th century. Despite his clean public image, he was also secretly a riverpirate and the leader of a gang that would come to be known as "Ford's Ferry Gang". His gang was the river equivalent ofhighway robber s; they would hijack ferries and flatboats with tradable goods from local farms coming down theOhio River . At one point, they used the "Cave-in-Rock " as their headquarters, on theIllinois side of the lower Ohio River, which is about 85 miles belowEvansville, Indiana .Early History
Although James Ford had made it to the Kentucky shore of the Ohio River by the late 1790s when
Samuel Mason 's band of river pirates operated out ofCave-in-Rock , there is no concrete evidence that he was there. Early stories of Ford being the same man as the James Wilson who operated a tavern and brothel out of the cave in the spring of 1799 are likely wrong as there are later accounts of a James Wilson in the area at the same time James Ford was.Criminal Associates
* John Hart Crenshaw of the Old Slave House (folklore)
* John Harmon
* Pennington Gang (successors after Ford's assassination and distant relatives)
* Isaiah L. Potts of Potts Inn
*Sturdivant Gang of counterfeiters.Military Service
* Captain of the Livingston County Cavalry of the 24th Regiment of (Ky.) Militia from July 1, 1799 to Dec. 15, 1802.
* Captain of the Grand Pierre area militia, 4th Regiment of (Ill. Terr.) Militia, Jan. 2, 1810. (This was in the area of what is now roughly the Grand Pierre Creek watershed near modern-day Rosiclare, Illinois, one of three militia districts in what is now Hardin County, Illinois). It's quite possible that the fort used by this militia company was the same one used by theSturdivant Gang in the late 1810s and early 1820s. At one point during the gang's occupation of the fort, Ford held the deed to the land.
* Promoted to Major (one of two such positions in the 4th Regiment) on Nov. 28, 1811. James Steele, Sr., succeeded him as captain of the Grand Pierre militia. Steele later became associated with theSturdivant Gang .Genealogy
James Ford (1770s - July 5, 1833) was the son of Philip Ford and Elizabeth Ford, son of John Ford. He had two brothers Philip Jr. and Richard. His father died while he was son and his mother remarried to William Prince who brought the family out to what would become Princeton, Kentucky. This second marriage would provide James with a number of step and half siblings that would provide important ties to his future political and criminal career.
In the late 1790s he married Susan Miles, the daughter of William Miles, brother of the ferry keeper at Miles Ferry which connected the Kentucky and Illinois banks of the Ohio River downriver of
Cave-in-Rock near the future location of Rosiclare, Illinois. She bore James two sons, Philip (Nov. 25, 1800 - Nov. 23, 1831) and William M. (1804 - Nov. 2, 1832), and one daughter, Cassandra (1805-06 - 1863). Susan died sometime in the 1820s and in 1829 Ford married Elizabeth "Betsy" W. (Armstead) Frazier (1790-1800 - 1834-1835), a widow whose husband had died suddenly while staying at Ford's plantation in what was thenLivingston County, Kentucky , and nowCrittenden County, Kentucky . She bore James one son, James N. Ford, Jr., (c. 1830 - October 1844).Through his first wife's family he secured the rights to the Miles Ferry which soon became known as Ford's Ferry, though this is not the infamous one he operated later upriver from Cave-in-Rock. Through his second marriage he secured control of the Frazier Salt Works at the Lower Lick (Great Salt Springs) in the Illinois Salines in Gallatin County, Illinois, during the late 1820s.
References
* "The Outlaws of Cave-in-Rock" by
Otto A. Rothert . ISBN 0-8093-2034-7
* W. D. Sniveley, Jr., and Louanna Furbee. 1868. "Satan's Ferryman: A True Tale of the Old Frontier". New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co.
* Thomas E. Prince, Jr. 1990. "The Story of a Family: The Origins of the Prince and Bradshaw Families of Lyon County, Kentucky". Louisville, Ky.: Horse Head Publishing. 46-47.External links
* [http://www.illinoishistory.com/jamesford.html "James Ford: 'Satan's Ferryman' and 'Outlaw of Cave-in-Rock"']
* [http://www.rootsweb.com/~ilhardi2/roguesgallery.html Rogue's Gallery]
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